Title: Merchem Company Review- Manufacturing of Rubber Band
1 Manufaturing Of Rubber Band
- MD Merchem
- Merchem Company Review
2Process
- 1 The initial stage of manufacturing the
harvested latex usually takes place on the rubber
plantation, prior to packing and shipping. The
first step in processing the latex is
purification, which entails straining it to
remove the other constituent elements apart from
rubber and to filter out impurities such as tree
sap and debris. - 2 The purified rubber is now collected in large
vats. Combined with acetic or formic acid, the
rubber particles cling together to form slabs. - 3 Next, the slabs are squeezed between rollers
to remove excess water and pressed into bales or
blocks, usually 2 or 3 square feet (.6 or .9
square meter), ready for shipping to factories.
The size of the blocks depends on what the
individual plantation can accommodate. -
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3Mixing and Milling
4 The rubber is then shipped to a rubber
factory. Here, the slabs are machine cut (or
chopped) into small pieces. Next, many
manufacturers use a Banbury Mixer,
invented in 1916 by Femely H. Banbury. This
machine mixes the rubber with other
ingredientssulfur to vulcanize it, pigments to
color it, and other chemicals to
increase or diminish the elasticity of the
resulting rubber bands. Although some
companies don't add these ingredients until the
next stage (milling), the Banbury machine
integrates them more thoroughly, producing a more
uniform product. 5 Milling, the next phase of
production, entails heating the rubber (a blended
mass if it has been mixed, discrete pieces
if it has not) and squeezing it flat in a milling
machine.
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4Extrusion
- 6 After the heated, flattened rubber leaves the
milling machine, it is cut into strips. Still
hot from the milling, the strips are then fed
into an extruding machine which forces the rubber
out in long, hollow tubes (much as a meat
grinder produces long strings of meat).
Excess rubber regularly builds up around
the head of each extruding machine, and this
rubber is cut off, collected, and placed
back with the rubber going into the milling
machine.
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5Curing
- 7 The tubes of rubber are then forced over
aluminum poles called mandrels,
which have been covered with talcum powder to
keep the rubber from sticking. Although
the rubber has already been
vulcanized, it's rather brittle at this point,
and needs to be "cured" before it is
elastic and usable. To accomplish this, the poles
are loaded onto racks that are
steamed and heated in large machines. - 8 Removed from the poles and washed to remove
the talcum powder, the tubes of rubber
are fed into another machine that slices them
into finished rubber bands. Rubber bands
are sold by weight, and,
because they tend to clump together, only small
quantities can be weighed accurately
by machines. Generally, any package over 5
pounds (2.2 kilograms) can be loaded by
machine but will still require manual
weighing and adjusting. -
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6Quality Control
- Sample rubber bands from each batch are subjected
to a variety of quality tests. One such test
measures modulus, or how hard a band snaps back
a tight band should snap back forcefully when
pulled, while a band made to secure fragile
objects should snap back more gently. Another
test, for elongation, determines how far a band
will stretch, which depends upon the percentage
of rubber in a band the more rubber, the further
it should stretch. A third trait commonly tested
is break strength, or whether a rubber band is
strong enough to withstand normal strain. If 90
percent of the sample bands in a batch pass a
particular test, the batch moves on to the next
test if 90 percent pass all of the tests, the
batch is considered market-ready. -
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7- MD Merchem
- Merchem Company Review